US11208627B2 - Augmented biocontainment materials and augmented biocontainment enclosures - Google Patents
Augmented biocontainment materials and augmented biocontainment enclosures Download PDFInfo
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- US11208627B2 US11208627B2 US16/250,457 US201916250457A US11208627B2 US 11208627 B2 US11208627 B2 US 11208627B2 US 201916250457 A US201916250457 A US 201916250457A US 11208627 B2 US11208627 B2 US 11208627B2
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- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C12—BIOCHEMISTRY; BEER; SPIRITS; WINE; VINEGAR; MICROBIOLOGY; ENZYMOLOGY; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING
- C12N—MICROORGANISMS OR ENZYMES; COMPOSITIONS THEREOF; PROPAGATING, PRESERVING, OR MAINTAINING MICROORGANISMS; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING; CULTURE MEDIA
- C12N5/00—Undifferentiated human, animal or plant cells, e.g. cell lines; Tissues; Cultivation or maintenance thereof; Culture media therefor
- C12N5/0068—General culture methods using substrates
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- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C12—BIOCHEMISTRY; BEER; SPIRITS; WINE; VINEGAR; MICROBIOLOGY; ENZYMOLOGY; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING
- C12M—APPARATUS FOR ENZYMOLOGY OR MICROBIOLOGY; APPARATUS FOR CULTURING MICROORGANISMS FOR PRODUCING BIOMASS, FOR GROWING CELLS OR FOR OBTAINING FERMENTATION OR METABOLIC PRODUCTS, i.e. BIOREACTORS OR FERMENTERS
- C12M23/00—Constructional details, e.g. recesses, hinges
- C12M23/02—Form or structure of the vessel
- C12M23/14—Bags
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- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C12—BIOCHEMISTRY; BEER; SPIRITS; WINE; VINEGAR; MICROBIOLOGY; ENZYMOLOGY; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING
- C12M—APPARATUS FOR ENZYMOLOGY OR MICROBIOLOGY; APPARATUS FOR CULTURING MICROORGANISMS FOR PRODUCING BIOMASS, FOR GROWING CELLS OR FOR OBTAINING FERMENTATION OR METABOLIC PRODUCTS, i.e. BIOREACTORS OR FERMENTERS
- C12M23/00—Constructional details, e.g. recesses, hinges
- C12M23/20—Material Coatings
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- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C12—BIOCHEMISTRY; BEER; SPIRITS; WINE; VINEGAR; MICROBIOLOGY; ENZYMOLOGY; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING
- C12M—APPARATUS FOR ENZYMOLOGY OR MICROBIOLOGY; APPARATUS FOR CULTURING MICROORGANISMS FOR PRODUCING BIOMASS, FOR GROWING CELLS OR FOR OBTAINING FERMENTATION OR METABOLIC PRODUCTS, i.e. BIOREACTORS OR FERMENTERS
- C12M23/00—Constructional details, e.g. recesses, hinges
- C12M23/26—Constructional details, e.g. recesses, hinges flexible
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- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C12—BIOCHEMISTRY; BEER; SPIRITS; WINE; VINEGAR; MICROBIOLOGY; ENZYMOLOGY; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING
- C12M—APPARATUS FOR ENZYMOLOGY OR MICROBIOLOGY; APPARATUS FOR CULTURING MICROORGANISMS FOR PRODUCING BIOMASS, FOR GROWING CELLS OR FOR OBTAINING FERMENTATION OR METABOLIC PRODUCTS, i.e. BIOREACTORS OR FERMENTERS
- C12M23/00—Constructional details, e.g. recesses, hinges
- C12M23/28—Constructional details, e.g. recesses, hinges disposable or single use
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- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C12—BIOCHEMISTRY; BEER; SPIRITS; WINE; VINEGAR; MICROBIOLOGY; ENZYMOLOGY; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING
- C12M—APPARATUS FOR ENZYMOLOGY OR MICROBIOLOGY; APPARATUS FOR CULTURING MICROORGANISMS FOR PRODUCING BIOMASS, FOR GROWING CELLS OR FOR OBTAINING FERMENTATION OR METABOLIC PRODUCTS, i.e. BIOREACTORS OR FERMENTERS
- C12M23/00—Constructional details, e.g. recesses, hinges
- C12M23/52—Mobile; Means for transporting the apparatus
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- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C12—BIOCHEMISTRY; BEER; SPIRITS; WINE; VINEGAR; MICROBIOLOGY; ENZYMOLOGY; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING
- C12M—APPARATUS FOR ENZYMOLOGY OR MICROBIOLOGY; APPARATUS FOR CULTURING MICROORGANISMS FOR PRODUCING BIOMASS, FOR GROWING CELLS OR FOR OBTAINING FERMENTATION OR METABOLIC PRODUCTS, i.e. BIOREACTORS OR FERMENTERS
- C12M25/00—Means for supporting, enclosing or fixing the microorganisms, e.g. immunocoatings
- C12M25/14—Scaffolds; Matrices
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- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C12—BIOCHEMISTRY; BEER; SPIRITS; WINE; VINEGAR; MICROBIOLOGY; ENZYMOLOGY; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING
- C12M—APPARATUS FOR ENZYMOLOGY OR MICROBIOLOGY; APPARATUS FOR CULTURING MICROORGANISMS FOR PRODUCING BIOMASS, FOR GROWING CELLS OR FOR OBTAINING FERMENTATION OR METABOLIC PRODUCTS, i.e. BIOREACTORS OR FERMENTERS
- C12M41/00—Means for regulation, monitoring, measurement or control, e.g. flow regulation
- C12M41/46—Means for regulation, monitoring, measurement or control, e.g. flow regulation of cellular or enzymatic activity or functionality, e.g. cell viability
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- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C12—BIOCHEMISTRY; BEER; SPIRITS; WINE; VINEGAR; MICROBIOLOGY; ENZYMOLOGY; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING
- C12N—MICROORGANISMS OR ENZYMES; COMPOSITIONS THEREOF; PROPAGATING, PRESERVING, OR MAINTAINING MICROORGANISMS; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING; CULTURE MEDIA
- C12N2533/00—Supports or coatings for cell culture, characterised by material
- C12N2533/30—Synthetic polymers
Definitions
- This application is directed to biocontainment and cell culture. More specifically, this application is directed to augmented biocontainment materials, augmented biocontainment enclosures, and methods for making and using the same.
- Disposable bioreactors and storage containment devices for living cells of various types are conventionally based on man-made polymers, and in most cases polymer films, assembled into bags or assemblies that have characteristics of volume, but these polymers and associated materials of construction expose the cell culture or cell load to non-biocompatible, fugitive, and potentially toxic materials.
- polyvinyl chloride PVC
- PET polyethylene terephthalate plasticized with phthalate esters, which are known to be cancer-causing.
- bioreactor constructs for cell culture, support, and development, and storage related to cell therapeutics, blood storage, microbial culture, and/or tissue engineering are desirable to create biocompatible surfaces and release mechanisms, to mitigate noxious environmental components having adverse interactions with living systems, and to advance improvements in cell culture viability, bioreactor constructs for cell culture, support, and development, and storage related to cell therapeutics, blood storage, microbial culture, and/or tissue engineering.
- cell culture viability it would be desirable to improve cell culture viability, bioreactor constructs for cell culture, and/or cell support, cell development, and/or cell storage related to somatic, stem, and/or microbiological cell therapeutics, blood storage, microbial culture, and/or tissue engineering.
- a biocontainment vessel includes a vessel structure including a structural composition and an enhancement composition associated with the structural composition.
- the enhancement composition includes a co-polymer.
- the co-polymer is a poly(glycerol sebacate) or a poly(glycerol sebacate urethane).
- a composition in another embodiment, includes a co-polymer and an augmentation agent contained by the co-polymer.
- the co-polymer is a poly(glycerol sebacate) or a poly(glycerol sebacate urethane).
- FIG. 1 shows a schematic cross section of a biocontainment vessel augmented with a PGS or poly(glycerol sebacate urethane) (PGSU) plasticizer in an embodiment of the present disclosure.
- PGSU poly(glycerol sebacate urethane)
- FIG. 2 shows a schematic cross section of a biocontainment vessel augmented with a coating in an embodiment of the present disclosure.
- Augmented biocontainment vessels for controlled storage, for cell expansion for therapy, and for general protection include constructions for the improvement and enhancement of cellular maintenance in storage, culture incubation, or expansion, where cellular environments require management of cell viability and reduction of adverse transfer of toxic components or by-products.
- the embodiments described herein may include an article of manufacture, a composition of matter, methods of using, and/or methods for forming or using the same.
- Preferred embodiments may include biocompatible surfaces, release mechanisms, and mitigation of noxious environmental components having adverse interactions with living systems.
- the augmentation agent may include, but is not limited to, a cell nutrient; a 2-3-diphosphoglycerate scavenger; a composition protecting against hemoglobin scavenging of nitrous oxide such as, for example, a stabilized hemoglobin protease, heme lipase, heme metalloprotease, or amino peptidases specific for hemoglobin; an affinity composition for toxins such as, for example, chelating agents or charged chemistries such as, for example, zwitterion entities; a fiber extrudate having specific enzymatic activity for hemoglobin; a paramagnetic material such as, for example, super paramagnetic iron oxide and other paramagnetic metals; a lactic acid scavenger through lactate dehydrogenase denaturation and other mechanisms to preserve aerobic respiration in storage including confined O 2 within polymer matrices including microparticles containing calcium peroxide and sodium percarbonate and other O 2 -releasing oxides that may
- biocontainment embodiments are contemplated, including, but not limited to, manipulations of surfaces, materials of construction, or designed mechanisms, to improve biocontainment vessels.
- FIG. 1 through FIG. 4 show approaches for producing a formulated coating or layer on a low-cost film, glass, or plastic, a reservoir within a low-cost film, or the reformulation and compounding of polymer raw resin components used in the extrusion and development of enhanced polymer films or plastic structures.
- FIG. 2 shows another embodiment of an augmented biocontainment vessel 10 .
- the enhancement composition 14 is a layer on the structural composition 12 on the containment side of the augmented biocontainment vessel 10 .
- the outer surface 16 of the augmented biocontainment vessel 10 and the inner surface 18 which is on the containment side of the augmented biocontainment vessel 10 , are shown as relatively smooth and the containment side surface of the structural composition 12 is shown as relatively rough compared to the outer surface 16 and inner surface 18 , each may independently be rough or smooth.
- the inner surface 18 of the augmented biocontainment vessel 10 may be provided by the enhancement composition 14 to have a roughness similar to or different from the roughness of the containment side of the structural composition 12 .
- the structural composition 12 includes PGSU as a bulk material in the augmented biocontainment vessel 10 .
- the enhancement composition 14 is a coating on the structural composition 12 and forms the inner surface 18 of the augmented biocontainment vessel 10 , whereas the outer surface 16 is uncoated.
- the enhancement composition 14 includes a nutrient-containing or functionally-modified PGS (NPGS).
- NPGS nutrient-containing or functionally-modified PGS
- the structural composition 12 includes a low-cost stock film or PVC with the outer surface 16 being uncoated.
- the enhancement composition 14 includes PGS or PGSU and may be provided as a coating, a film, a co-extruded layer, a polymer surface modification, or by coupling agent chemistry to the bulk material.
- the enhancement composition 14 may provide the augmented biocontainment vessel 10 with passivation, nutrients, a barrier, preservation, and/or anticoagulation.
- the structural composition 12 includes a low-cost stock film or PVC as a bulk material of the augmented biocontainment vessel 10 .
- the enhancement composition 14 is a coating on the structural composition 12 that forms the inner surface 18 of the augmented biocontainment vessel 10 , whereas the outer surface 16 is uncoated.
- the enhancement composition 14 includes an NPGS or a nutrient-containing or functionally-modified PGSU (NPGSU).
- the functional modification may be a preservation component, an anticoagulation component, citric acid, phosphate, dextrose, and/or adenine.
- FIG. 4 shows a partial perspective view of the augmented biocontainment vessel 10 of FIG. 2 in the form of a blood bag.
- the augmented biocontainment vessel 10 includes a vessel structure defining an enclosed or contained space.
- An enhancement composition 14 on one side of the augmented biocontainment vessel 10 provides the inner surface 18 of the augmented biocontainment vessel 10 , whereas the outer surface 16 provided by the structural composition 12 is uncoated.
- the enhancement composition 14 may include PGS or PGSU and may be provided as a coating, a film, a co-extruded layer, a polymer surface modification, or by coupling agent chemistry to the structural composition 12 .
- Any of the vessel embodiments of FIGS. 1, 2, and 3 may have such a shape or any other appropriate biocontainment vessel shape.
- Polymer films may be physically modified or chemically treated to provide a mechanism that may prevent adhesion or may release essential components into the culture media from the interior walls of the containment device.
- containment surfaces may protect the contents from deterioration or cell death by autoimmune response.
- anticoagulants and preservatives may be embedded into contact films such that the essential components either fugitively migrate into the culture or are released by stimulated release or controlled degradation.
- Polymer films may be considered 3-D structures at the molecular level that may modify the film's incubation function with engineering properties or hold onto additives and essential components for delivery into the culture medium for cell survival.
- additives and essential components may include, but are not limited to, plasticizers, nutritional compounds, active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs), biologics, active small molecules not considered drugs, preservatives, gases, or antioxidants.
- polymer synthesis provides new materials of construction for films and coating vehicles.
- Polymeric film stock may, however, be developed having not only the engineering properties required for fabrication but also the matrix purity for biocompatibility. For instance, a pristine polymer may be developed that is process-compounded with metabolites to eliminate any toxic or detrimental effect to the contained cells, should material migrate or bloom from the surface of the films.
- a biocontainment enhancement provides smart containment.
- Electronic and photonic integration into film composite structures may create “intelligent” systems that may monitor and analyze in real time.
- Lab-on-a-chip technology may be integrated into film stock to provide process control, as well as essential physiological and biological information.
- a classic passive or neutral interior containment volume constructed from man-made materials is transformed to include active surfaces that may be customized to provide the cultured cells or stored cells with essential biochemistry or mechano-biologic conditions.
- Coating vehicles may be derived from specialized biocompatible resin vehicles, such as PGS, PGSU, or co-polymers of such, that provide bio-inertness or bio-stimulation depending upon the mechanism in use.
- PGS monomers are metabolites and as such the breakdown by-products of PGS may provide components to the Krebs cycle.
- the benign nature of the glycerol esters may also permit their use as controlled release matrices.
- Coatings may act as passivation or scavenger surfaces when formulated with counterion or polymer affinity functionality.
- Films may be compounded and formulated for extrusion to create wall structures, either as stand-alone or composite surfaces, to the interior that deliver a specific requirement or service preservation. Compounded films may also act as constructed composites that hold materials as a reservoir.
- PGS is incorporated as a “non-phthalate” plasticizer for PVC and polyurethane (PU) film stock.
- a compounded resin system as a film stock includes PGSU derived from PGS for biocompatibility in cell contact interfacing.
- smart materials for containment monitoring and management may include diagnostic systems such as active (integrated circuit-based technology) and passive (chemistry-based technology) diagnostic systems.
- biocontainment enhancements include polymer resin and coating vehicles, such as PGS resin and modifications for web stock coating.
- PGS is formulated as an anti-coagulant, an anti-adhesion composition, a self-“cleaning” film coating, or a combination thereof.
- the PGS may act as a backbone vehicle support for anchored nutrient and additive film coatings, such as, for example, with components like citrate phosphate dextrose adenine (CPDA) solution or citrate phosphate dextrose (CPD) solution for anticoagulation blood storage.
- CPDA citrate phosphate dextrose adenine
- CPD citrate phosphate dextrose
- PGS serves as a nutrient support, a passivation layer, and/or a barrier film coating modification to support cell survival and culture and use of stock film.
- the use of PGS or PGS and co-polymers and crosslink options may be preferred in the case of film technology.
- Films and film-like technologies such as, for example, sputter coats, lacquers, passivation treatments, and coupling aged fixation may serve as barrier coating layers to prevent fugitive loss of toxic materials into containment vessels.
- the developed film is a polymer option as a new material of construction that passivates harmful chemistry from the interior wall and provides a biocompatible and bioactive surface to the benefit of the culture or storage needs.
- PGS resin vehicles are based on specific molecular weight (MW) and stoichiometric variations of metabolite monomers for coatings formulated with specialized culture media requirements for treatment of containment interiors for nutrition, for buffering, for preservation or homeostatic development, for red blood cell (RBC) transfusion and storage, for progenitor cell expansion and monitoring of culture processes for cell therapy, for somatic cell tissue engineering and organ regeneration, or combinations thereof.
- the device may be an “instant” media single-use device characterized by just adding water to provide nutrient support that originates from the containment walls.
- the wall nutrition may be in the form of “dehydrated” compositions, where a wall coating converts to media support or media compositions.
- high-MW PGS extrusion resins and co-polymers are synthesized, compounded, and formulated with specialized culture media formulations for extruded film stock of containment interiors for nutrition, buffering, preservation, or homeostatic development in RBC transfusion and storage, progenitor expansion and incubation, somatic cell tissue engineering, or combinations thereof.
- the high-MW PGS extrusion resin has a weight average molecular weight of at least 25 kilodaltons (kDa), alternatively 25 kDa to 40 kDa, alternatively at least 60 kDa, alternatively 60 kDa to 100 kDa, or any value, range, or sub-range therebetween, to provide solid thermoplastic surfaces.
- non-lactide and/or non-glycolide biodegradable or biocompatible film coating systems are prepared for cell contact mediation and film-wall passivation from standard film stocks to level and remove antagonistic topographies, for barrier film composite construction to block out fugitive toxic polymer additives, or combinations thereof.
- CPDA solution “additives” citric acid, phosphate, dextrose, and/or adenine/adenosine
- interior wall coatings or film stock polymers formulated from PGS, PGSU, a co-polymer thereof, or another non-lactide or non-glycolide for preservation, anticoagulation, nutrition, or combinations thereof.
- CPDA solution components all contain functional groups that may be incorporated or reacted into the backbone of PGS, PGSU, or a co-polymer thereof.
- one or more CPDA solution components are incorporated into the PGS or PGSU polymer, creating coatings with anchored (polymerized-in) additives to PGS or PGSU.
- the CPDA-modified resins may be further converted into extrusion resins or coating vehicles for preservation, anticoagulation, nutrition, self-buffering, or combinations thereof.
- Nitrous oxide is a vasodilator, and hemoglobin (Hgb) scavenges any free NO in collected and stored blood. This aggravates the depletion of NO as blood ages from cell membrane lysing, consequently releasing Hgb.
- vasoconstriction is antagonistic in blood transfusions, especially for hypovolemic patients.
- passivation or a coating for film-wall saturation protects against Hgb scavenging of NO.
- wall reservoirs release or diffuse NO throughout blood storage to counter Hgb action by Hgb saturation with NO.
- Blood is collected from a diverse population with varying degrees of blood factors related to hygiene, health, and contamination.
- a passive indicator or active integrated electronic or photonic chemical indicator system or lab-on-a-chip is integrated into film stock for blood factor profiling and contaminant identification.
- Further embodiments include integrated chemical indicator strips or chemo-responsive films, totally smart blood profiling device units, diabetes blood glucose monitors, immunomodulatory markers for disease-specific blood recipients, or combinations thereof.
- Blood metabolic by-product chemicals such as 2,3-diphosphoglycerate (2,3-DPG) may antagonize the O 2 uptake once transfused to the patient.
- indigenous 2,3-DPG film response for metabolic activity includes an “indicator strip” film on a bag for 2,3-DPG, incorporation of a 2,3-DPG scavenger in vessel wall constructs, or combinations thereof.
- a coating is applied to a quick-treatment nutrient bag.
- Coating vehicles may be considered stock treatments to a formed film material of construction before container assembly.
- the film surface pretreatment has either a selective affinity or a broad affinity to a solution that may be added to a constructed container immediately prior to use.
- Such containment vessels may include a pre-activated surface that captures and couples respective treatments as needed on the fly.
- a buffy coat is the fraction of an anticoagulated blood sample that contains most of the white blood cells and platelets following density gradient centrifugation of the blood.
- a gradient coating on side walls of a container is designed with surface energy properties that have a super-affinity for plasma, the leukocytes and platelets of a buffy coat, and the erythrocytes via surface energy distinction, thereby stabilizing separation.
- a buffy coat bag may include greater separation efficiencies than achieved by centrifugation.
- an antimicrobial, non-antibiotic film-wall coating reduces sepsis and transmission of communicable diseases.
- polymers compounded and formulated for extrusion may also serve as an assembly for materials of construction. Further embodiments may include PGS coatings, small chain fatty acid glycerol ester polymer coatings, nanostructure film modification, or combinations thereof.
- PGS, PGSU, or a co-polymer thereof coats extruded fibers of alginates for advanced filtration systems.
- a fiber extrudate may be prepared based on 100% resin composition.
- RBCs are under constant pressure (120 mm Hg+/ ⁇ ) as blood leaves the heart and travels to the capillaries in a normal in vivo arterial blood environment. Once the RBCs “feel” the 0.0 mm Hg pressure on the venous side of the vascular stream, the RBCs swell, which alters their natural oxygen-bearing homeostasis. Venous blood is not under pressure and does not carry O 2 . In one embodiment, a device recreates the natural hyperbaric blood environment to mitigate RBC deterioration.
- an electromagnetic (EM) and/or pulsatile beat bag reduces O 2 release by RBCs.
- the bag pulses either as an individual bag or an external storage device, whereby the blood container is pulsed or designed to simulate cardiovascular pulsatile behavior by contact with or placement in the storage device.
- the device electrolytically generates O 2 from water.
- a specialized EM cryo-device provides EM pulsing in cryostorage to align cells.
- an EM blood preservation bag includes a bag film infused with paramagnetic materials and/or strong dipole materials to enhance the EM field.
- Appropriate paramagnetic materials may include, but are not limited to, magnesium, sodium, iron, aluminum, or any other metal or element so coordinated to feature a paramagnetic property having available coordination complexes with d and f electrons to respond to field effects.
- Blood like all human tissue, is bathed in EM fields in vivo. An EM field has been shown to benefit RBC storage ex vivo. Exemplary containment embodiments simulate the in vivo exposure to EM fields.
- chemotactic walls of a containment vessel include a lactic acid scavenger.
- Appropriate lactic acid scavengers may include, but are not limited to, lactase enzymes, lactate dehydrogenase, or any other biomolecules exhibiting Lewis base characteristics.
- a containment vessel has an affinity for adsorption or conversion of lactic acid from the culture or fluid environment.
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Abstract
Description
Claims (27)
Priority Applications (2)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| US16/250,457 US11208627B2 (en) | 2018-01-17 | 2019-01-17 | Augmented biocontainment materials and augmented biocontainment enclosures |
| US17/538,241 US20220090006A1 (en) | 2018-01-17 | 2021-11-30 | Augmented biocontainment materials and augmented biocontainment enclosures |
Applications Claiming Priority (2)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| US201862618419P | 2018-01-17 | 2018-01-17 | |
| US16/250,457 US11208627B2 (en) | 2018-01-17 | 2019-01-17 | Augmented biocontainment materials and augmented biocontainment enclosures |
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| US17/538,241 Continuation US20220090006A1 (en) | 2018-01-17 | 2021-11-30 | Augmented biocontainment materials and augmented biocontainment enclosures |
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| US20190218507A1 US20190218507A1 (en) | 2019-07-18 |
| US11208627B2 true US11208627B2 (en) | 2021-12-28 |
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| WO2021207643A1 (en) * | 2020-04-09 | 2021-10-14 | The Secant Group, Llc | Modified polymer film surfaces for single-use bioreactor bags and biocontainment and methods of forming same |
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| WO2004094586A2 (en) | 2003-04-18 | 2004-11-04 | Carnegie Mellon University | Three-dimentional, flexible cell growth substrate and related methods |
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| US8980300B2 (en) * | 2004-08-05 | 2015-03-17 | Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. | Plasticizers for coating compositions |
| US8492150B2 (en) * | 2006-02-03 | 2013-07-23 | President And Fellows Of Harvard College | Engineered cell growth on polymeric films and biotechnological applications thereof |
| WO2014031852A2 (en) * | 2012-08-22 | 2014-02-27 | Haemonetics Corporation | Blood storage container containing aqueous composition for the storage of red blood cells |
| CN107532120A (en) * | 2015-04-29 | 2018-01-02 | 3M创新有限公司 | An independent complete set of culture equipment that produces anaerobic environment |
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- 2019-01-17 CN CN201980008907.3A patent/CN111615531A/en active Pending
- 2019-01-17 WO PCT/US2019/013997 patent/WO2019143807A1/en not_active Ceased
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2020
- 2020-07-02 IL IL275827A patent/IL275827A/en unknown
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2021
- 2021-11-30 US US17/538,241 patent/US20220090006A1/en not_active Abandoned
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Also Published As
| Publication number | Publication date |
|---|---|
| US20220090006A1 (en) | 2022-03-24 |
| US20190218507A1 (en) | 2019-07-18 |
| EP3740528A1 (en) | 2020-11-25 |
| WO2019143807A1 (en) | 2019-07-25 |
| IL275827A (en) | 2020-08-31 |
| KR20200110657A (en) | 2020-09-24 |
| CN111615531A (en) | 2020-09-01 |
| CA3088947A1 (en) | 2019-07-25 |
| JP2021511031A (en) | 2021-05-06 |
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